Left to right: Insurance Institute of Kenya directorJoseph Luvisia
Jamwaka and Insurance Institute of Uganda (IIU) president Ronald Zake
hand over a Senior Associate Certificate to Ms Khabuya Barbara, a IIU
member. COURTSEY PHOTO
Kampala.
The
Insurance Institute of Uganda (IIU) will this year focus on building
capacity in new areas of insurance including bancassurance, Islamic
insurance, pensions and micro insurance to equip players
with adequate skills in order to harness the sector’s full potential.
with adequate skills in order to harness the sector’s full potential.
This
follows Parliament’s approval of the Financial Institutions Amendment
Act early last year, to among others, allow for Bancassurance (banks
selling insurance products on behalf of insurance firms) and takaful –
Islamic insurance.
With Bancassurance, insurers hope to
ride on the back of strong confidence in the banking sector and the
wide spread branch network coverage to boost insurance penetration from
the current 0.86 per cent to about 3 per cent over the next 10 years.
Speaking
during the closure of the IIU Annual Insurance Week at Serena Hotel in
Kampala last week, the IIU chief executive officer Saul Sseremba, said
the move seeks to prepare the industry to fully harness the potential of
the emerging areas in insurance.
IIU is the training
body of the insurance industry in Uganda which is charged with
developing and conducting training activities for its membership.
The
Kenya Insurance Institute director Joseph Luvisia Jamwaka, challenged
IIU to build more skills, especially in fraud prevention and management,
so as to bridge the huge skills gap and support sector growth.
Mr
Jamwaka also urged them to localise their training programmes so as to
teach issues that are applicable in the Ugandan insurance market.
“You
need to consider having more of their local programmes, away from
foreign ones. International programmes are meant for the international
markets. Teaching a Ugandan motor insurance using UK content is not
relevant and it will not help the industry because we are at different
levels of development. Localisation is critical,” he said.
Additionally,
he urged government to waive tax on insurance products so as to
increase accessibility. Government reinstated the 18 per cent Value
Added Tax on insurance products about three years ago and also increased
stamp duty from Shs5,000 to sh35,000. This increases the cost of
insurance as insurers factor it in the final price of insurance
products.
IIU members were awarded with certificates and diplomas as associates, senior associates, chartered members and fellows.
The fraud risk
The
2015 KPMG East Africa Insurance Fraud Risk Survey indicates that while
the detected insurance claims in Uganda were valued at $10,000
(Shsh36m), it estimated that the actual cost of claims-related fraud is
about $500,000 (Shs1.7b), annually.
The commonest form of fraud in Uganda is claim exaggeration where the insured claims a higher value in compensation than that what they would have fairly deserved and medical insurance.
Additionally, there are cases of faked motor vehicle accidents, fires and burglary, among others.
The commonest form of fraud in Uganda is claim exaggeration where the insured claims a higher value in compensation than that what they would have fairly deserved and medical insurance.
Additionally, there are cases of faked motor vehicle accidents, fires and burglary, among others.
jadengo@ug.nationmedia.com
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